Coming in at No. 5 on our year-end list is the story that took the longest, and also the shortest, amount of time to develop. When Centerville-born bluesman Sam "Lightnin'" Hopkins passed away in 1982, he counted musicians like Townes Van Zandt, ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons, Ringo Starr and Bob Dylan among his many fans. However, the City of Houston was not on that list.

For nearly 30 years, any efforts to obtain any sort of official memorial to Hopkins within the city where he spent approximately the last 40 years of his life fell on deaf ears. Late City Councilwoman Eleanor Tinsley once suggested naming a park after Hopkins, an idea that was voted down by others who thought granting such an honor would be the same as encouraging vices such as drinking and gambling, both of which Hopkins was known to do from time to time.

Then in Summer 2009, R. Eric Davis, a private citizen and former cataloger at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and his daughter visited Hopkins' grave in Houston's Forest Park Cemetery. They almost couldn't find it.

"We were stunned," Davis told Rocks Off back then. "We found his headstone and it's this 12-18 inch slab of granite. I was taken aback that this was the only memorial this guy has, for all that he did."

That November, Davis submitted a proposal to the Harris County Historical Commission for an official Texas State Historical Marker for Hopkins, to be placed on the grounds of Project Row Houses in Third Ward, a part of town Hopkins spent so much time in he eventually became known as "The King of Dowling Street."

Almost exactly a year later, Davis was choking back tears at the marker's dedication ceremony.